Dec. 23, 2008
Google's Grand Ambitions
Web Giant Tried To Grow With Browsers, Phones, Display Ads And Apps In 2008, But The Economy And Feds Dampened Some Plans
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(AP)
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Section Tech News All about the digital world, from computers and gadgets to industry news and hot tech trends.
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The company began the year overcoming opposition to its $3.1 billion acquisition of DoubleClick, a move that gave Google more clout in the market for graphical "display" ads. But that antitrust fight was a harbinger of things to come.
In April, Google showed its ambitions to house not just its own online applications such as Google Docs, but also others' with a project called Google App Engine. Basic applications are free, but more taxing ones cost money, a pay-as-you-go model that's popular with the cloud-computing concept.
Google Apps, which combines Docs with Gmail and Calendar, thus far remains a small threat to Microsoft Office and Exchange. But given Microsoft's announcement of its own project for a cloud-based version of Office, the threat is clearly a potent one. Google got more serious with a service level agreement that commits to 99.9 percent availability for Google Apps' paying customers.
In September came a Google bombshell: the open-source Chrome browser. With it, Google wants to make using the Web as fast as possible to spur greater activity. It also hopes to spur better Web applications, such as Google Docs and Gmail. In a surprise, Google released Chrome 1.0 in December.
The same indirect motivation--to profit from more use of the Internet -- sits behind Android, the open-source operating system project spearheaded by Google. In October, T-Mobile began selling the first Android-powered phone, the G1. The phone earned much hype but only show Google's search ads as well as its own. Yahoo expected $800 million in new revenue in the deal's first year.
Google justified the deal by saying it prefers a world with Yahoo independent. And Yahoo, with a major layoff in February and a second one cutting 1,520 jobs in December, was showing plenty of weakness despite the introduction of new display-ad technology called Apt and the creation of more social and more active Web properties through its Yahoo Open Strategy. Indeed, by November, Chief Executive Jerry Yang threw in the towel and agreed to step down once a replacement was found.
But Google's lifeline to Yahoo was withdrawn when the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit threat killed the Yahoo-Google partnership. Microsoft, which had lobbied hard against the deal, all but cackled with glee.
Yahoo was the obviously wounded party, but Google essentially was given notice that the DOJ is willing to check Google's power. Google's might means the company must now work harder to prove that its aspirations of benevolence are real.
By Stephen Shankland
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- why isn''t google search engine OPEN SOURCE ?
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- Firefox was OK, but as it picked up steam it ran into similar problems as early IE did. A lot of browser bias seems religious/political. So, I too hope Google can pull a rabbit out of the hat here.
I am cautiously optimistic, since many Google tacks like a browser are often hype. I mean, for all the horsepower they are disappointing. I don''t know anyone who works there, but seems to me to from the outside to consist of thousands of small actors each struggling to gain attention. Then as soon as their project generates a little heat they move on, as if these people still see the World as just a bunch of homework problems. Not sure. - Reply to this comment
- As soon as these slowpokes at British Telecom get my phone line installed, the first thing I''m gonna do is try out Chrome. I''ve tried several "alternative" browsers over the years, but none have been good enough to take over for IE. I''m somewhat of a Google fan, so I hope Chrome lives up to the hype I''ve been hearing.
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